RBerenguel wrote:daal wrote:John's post reminds me of a description I once heard of a clown school in Switzerland, in which the juggling students were required to spend the first year using only one ball. Anyone can toss a ball or three from one hand to the other, but if you spend a year doing it with just one ball, that ball will do exactly what you want. It seems obvious to me that this precision would be far more difficult to achieve otherwise, and is an invaluable skill when faced with complex patterns. How this applies to learning go, I'm not quite sure, but as an example, really knowing inside and out how a certain jump can be cut and under what circumstances, is something that could be trained in a similar manner.
Actually the proper way to learn the 3 ball cascade (i.e. starting into juggling) is to start with just one ball and keep at it for an ungodly high amount of time. Of course, no-one does it for long enough (on its own) and you eventually pick 2, three and then spend a lot of time crouching. But the day you get a cascade is great
When I was eight I got a magic set for Christmas, which included three hard rubber balls and a booklet on how to juggle. The first lesson was to throw one ball straight up in the air and catch it with the throwing hand. So far, so good. The second lesson was to do it with your eyes closed. That was the end of my juggling career.